- Tiruvarur Mutuswamy Aiyar
Sir Tiruvarur Mutuswamy Aiyar (1832-1895), was a native Indian judge of
Madras High Court during the British colonial era. Hewas born of poor parents in the village ofVuchuwadi , nearTanjore , on the 28th of January 1832. His widowed mother was forced by poverty to remove with Mutuswamy and his brother toTiruvarar , where the former learnt Tamil, and soon set to work under the village accountant at a monthly salary of one rupee. About this time he lost his mother, whose memory he cherished with reverence and affection to the last. His duty took him to the courthouse of the "tehsildar ", Mr. Naiken, who soon remarked his extraordinary intelligence and industry. There was an English school at Tiruvarar, where Mutuswamy managed to pick up an elementary knowledge of theEnglish language . Naiken then sent him to SirHenry Montgomery 's school at Madras, as a companion to his nephew, and there he won prizes and scholarships year after year. In 1854 he won a prize of 500rupee s offered to the students of the Madras presidency by the council of education for the best English essay. This success brought him to the notice of SirAlexander John Arbuthnot and Mr. Justice Holloway. He was offered help to proceed toEngland and compete for thecivil service , but being aBrahmin and married, he declined to cross the ocean. Instead he entered the subordinate government service, and was employed in such various posts as school-teacher, record-keeper in Tanjore, and in 1856 deputy-inspector of schools. At this time the Madras authorities instituted the examination for the office of pleaders, and Mutuswamy came out first in the first examination, even beating Sir T.Madhavarao , his senior by many years. Mutuswamy was then appointed in succession district "munsiff" atTranquebar , deputy-collector in Tanjore in 1859, sub-judge of southKanara in 1865, and a magistrate of police at Madras in 1868. While serving in the last post he passed the examination for the degree of bachelor of laws of the local university. He was next employed as a judge of the Madras small causes court, until in 1878 he was raised to the bench of the high court, which office he occupied with ability and distinction for over fifteen years, sometimes acting as the chief justice. He attended by invitation of theviceroy the imperial assemblage atDelhi in 1877. In 1878 he received the honour of C.I.E. and in 1893 the K.C.I.E. (Order of the Indian Empire ) was conferred on him. But he did not live long to enjoy this dignity, dying suddenly in 1895. Mutuswamy was too devoted to his official work to give much time to other pursuits. Still he took his full share in the affairs of the Madras university, of which he was nominated a fellow in 1872 and asyndic in 1877, and was well acquainted with English law, literature and philosophy. He was throughout life a staunch Brahmin, devout and amiable in character, with a taste for the ancient music of India and the study of the "Vedas " and other departments ofSanskrit literature .References
*1911
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